| 5. Lower
Gastrointestinal Bleeding
/ S.J. Vanner |
page
392 |
Lower GI bleeding often
presents as a medical emergency. Like other medical emergencies, optimum
patient care requires careful assessment and resuscitation. The history
and physical findings provide important clues to the etiology and are
critical for determining the severity and location of the bleeding site.
Lower GI bleeding can be
classified arbitrarily as major or minor. Patients presenting with the
passage of significant amounts of bright red blood per rectum and
hemodynamic compromise have major GI blood loss and are at risk of
life-threatening hypovolemia. Be wary of the patient who may have
stabilized temporarily or received intravenous fluids prior to a full
clinical assessment. Historical clues to a major bleed include the
occurrence of syncope or presyncope prior to seeking medical care. The
vital signs, with particular attention paid to postural changes, are
crucial to assessing severity. The passage of bright red blood per
rectum almost always orginates from the colon. However, it is important to
remember that brisk bleeding from a site in the upper GI tract may
masquerade as a major lower GI bleed. In contrast to the patient with
major lower GI bleeding is the patient who describes the passage of bright
red blood per rectum as blood on the tissue paper or on the outside of
formed stool in the absence of other symptoms. Such patients, whose
general physical examination is normal, usually have a minor lower GI
bleed. Most often this is due to local perianal pathology.
| 5.1 Determining the Site of
Bleeding (Upper or Lower GI Tract) |
page
392 |
In the clinical setting of
a major lower GI bleed with the passage of bright red blood per rectum and
hemodynamic compromise, there are a number of important clues that may
raise the suspicion of an upper GI source. These include a past history or
symptoms of peptic ulcer disease, NSAID use, prior abdominal aneurysm
repair, alcohol abuse and coexisting liver disease. Unfortunately, the
lack of upper GI symptoms does not exclude peptic ulcer disease, as a
number of duodenal ulcers present as major GI bleeds without a previous
typical ulcer history. On physical examination, the finding of hypovolemic
shock, particularly in a young person, should trigger immediate
consideration of a proximal source of bleeding. Features of chronic liver
disease and portal hypertension suggest varices as a possible cause. Most
major upper GI bleeding, even in a young person, is accompanied by a
transient rise in the BUN (blood urea nitrogen), whereas this is not
typical in a lower GI bleed unless there is renal comorbidity.
When an upper GI source is
considered, several actions are necessary. A nasogastric tube returning
bloody gastric aspirate positively identifies a proximal source of
bleeding, but a negative aspirate may not. A negative aspirate will
exclude significant bleeding from the esophagus or stomach but may fail to
identify bleeding from the duodenum. Even aspirates with bile staining and
no blood may fail to identify 5–10% of bleeding duodenal ulcers. When an
upper GI source cannot be excluded with confidence, urgent upper endoscopy
is required.
Another potentially
confusing scenario involves the patient presenting with melena. Melena
results from the digestion of blood as it travels through the GI tract,
and almost always originates from the upper GI tract. However,
occasionally transit of blood from a bleeding right colon is sufficiently
slow that stool can appear as melena or melena mixed with dark red blood.
Positive fecal occult blood
tests are another clue to lower gastrointestinal bleeding. Many results
prove to be false positives; testing should be done with patients on a
controlled diet (no red meat, vitamin C or aspirin) to minimize this
possibility. Occult positive stools can result from bleeding sites in
either the upper or lower GI tract.
| 5.2 Major Lower GI Bleeding |
page 393 |
Angiodysplasia and
diverticular bleeding are the two most common causes of major lower GI
bleeding, accounting for up to 60–70% of cases.
Angiodysplastic lesions
result from dilation and tortuosity of submucosal veins associated with
small arteriovenous communication with submucosal arterioles. These
lesions are typically multiple, less than 5 mm in diameter, and are most
commonly found in the right colon and cecum. The pathogenesis of these
lesions is unknown but they occur most commonly in elderly patients and
differ from congenital vascular lesions. Diverticula are located
predominantly in the left colon, but angiographic studies have shown that
those in the right colon bleed more frequently. The pathophysiology
underlying diverticular bleeding is also uncertain but is thought to
result from rupture of arteries that penetrate the dome of the
diverticulum.
A number of other possible
but less common causes exist (Table
6), but many of these more typically present with minor lower GI
bleeding and a clinical picture dominated by other features such as
diarrhea. Angiodysplasia, unlike diverticular bleeding, can also present
with minor chronic GI bleeding, and may even present as chronic anemia
secondary to microscopic blood loss. In contrast to angiodysplasia and
diverticular bleeding, which are relatively painless, bleeding secondary
to colonic ischemia is typically preceded by minutes to hours of
significant abdominal pain. Abdominal x-rays may demonstrate
thumb-printing, but this finding is neither specific nor sensitive.
TABLE 6. Causes of
major lower GI bleed
|
Very common
Diverticular disease
Angiodysplasia |
Less common
Ischemia
Neoplasia
Inflammatory bowel disease
Hemobilia
Perianal disease
Aortoenteric fistula
Solitary rectal ulcer |
|
Most major lower GI
bleeding will stop without intervention and can be investigated
electively, but up to 25% will continue to bleed and require immediate
investigation and treatment (Figure
3). After resuscitation, the next priority is to identify the
site of bleeding. Radionuclide scanning using technetium-labeled red blood
cells is least invasive and readily available in most centers, but
interpretation is fraught with false negative and positive results.
Although angiography is less available and more invasive, it is more
accurate and has the advantage of therapeutic intervention with
embolization of the arteriole feeding the bleeding lesion. Colonoscopy can
also be attempted to identify the bleeding lesion, and if angiodysplasia
is evident it can be treated with electrocautery. However, unless the rate
of bleeding is relatively slow, ongoing bleeding usually obscures the
lumen, making it difficult to identify the responsible lesion and
technically difficult to advance the colonoscope to the site of bleeding.
In some cases, continuing bleeding (requiring transfusions of 6–10 units
of blood) requires either urgent angiography with embolization or surgical
resection with a subtotal colectomy.
| 5.3 Minor Lower GI Bleeding |
page 394 |
Minor bleeding from the
lower GI tract is a common complaint and requires a careful approach (Figure
3) to differentiate minor pathology such as hemorrhoids and
fissures from serious problems such as colonic tumors. Patients may notice
blood only on the outside of formed stool or on the tissue paper,
suggesting that the blood originates from the anal canal or the
rectosigmoid region. Alternatively, some patients notice that the blood is
mixed in the stool, suggesting that bleeding is more proximal within the
colon.
TABLE 7. Causes of
minor lower GI bleed
|
Very common
Hemorrhoids
Fissures
Other perianal disease
Proctitis |
Less common
Neoplasia
Inflammatory bowel disease
Infectious colitis
Radiation colitis
Angiodysplasia
Ischemia
Rectal ulcer |
|
Hemorrhoids are the
commonest cause of minor bleeding (Table
7), but even when the history is very suggestive, proctoscopic or
sigmoidoscopic assessment should be carried out to ensure that a rectal
lesion such as proctitis or a tumor is not mimicking this presentation.
Patients with ulcerative proctitis often have frequent bowel movements but
pass only bright red blood and mucus on many occasions. Radiation
proctitis can present shortly after radiotherapy treatment but is often
delayed by many months or years. This condition results from chronic
inflammation within the blood vessels, called endarteritis obliterans, and
this indolent process underlies the delayed presentation. |